Kramer vs Kramer
The one and only "Seinfeld" movie, it sees the cast deal with Kramer's evil twin, an alter ego that has escaped his dreams and turns out to be even more troublesome than the original Kramer. Yes, it's outlandish and crazy, even in the movie everybody laughs and dismisses the idea at first, but as strange occurrences pile up and the line between reality and dreamworld blurs it becomes clear that something must be done, and somebody will be done in a finale that involves breaking the fourth wall and taking advantage of "script logic" to trap alter-Kramer and send him back to slumberland. With normality restored the cast can go back to the series routine (the movie never makes clear just when in the series timeline this takes place, spawning multiple fan theories).
And if you're thinking that this doesn't sound like a typical Seinfeld episode, well, that's intentional. As covered in many interviews and articles, the cast and the writers just weren't keen on making a movie just to repeat what was being done the series already and everybody wanted to experiment and try something new. And it actually worked, trippy and wonky in places, with occasionally wobbly logic (even by dream-logic standards), but never boring, it fared pretty well at the box-office and became well liked by the fans after a little initial scepticism.
The one and only "Seinfeld" movie, it sees the cast deal with Kramer's evil twin, an alter ego that has escaped his dreams and turns out to be even more troublesome than the original Kramer. Yes, it's outlandish and crazy, even in the movie everybody laughs and dismisses the idea at first, but as strange occurrences pile up and the line between reality and dreamworld blurs it becomes clear that something must be done, and somebody will be done in a finale that involves breaking the fourth wall and taking advantage of "script logic" to trap alter-Kramer and send him back to slumberland. With normality restored the cast can go back to the series routine (the movie never makes clear just when in the series timeline this takes place, spawning multiple fan theories).
And if you're thinking that this doesn't sound like a typical Seinfeld episode, well, that's intentional. As covered in many interviews and articles, the cast and the writers just weren't keen on making a movie just to repeat what was being done the series already and everybody wanted to experiment and try something new. And it actually worked, trippy and wonky in places, with occasionally wobbly logic (even by dream-logic standards), but never boring, it fared pretty well at the box-office and became well liked by the fans after a little initial scepticism.